CORRECTION: German government denies media report on coal exit by 2035
Spiegel Online / BMWi
The German government denies a report by news website Spiegel Online that the country's coal exit commission will propose to initiate the fossil fuel's phase-out in the west of the country and favours to finish it by 2035. Germany鈥檚 economy and energy ministry (BMWi), where the commission鈥檚 secretariat is based, said in a short statement 鈥渙n behalf of the commission鈥 that 鈥渢he entire report lacks any basis.鈥
In the article on Spiegel Online, Gerald Traufetter writes that a leaked draft of the commission鈥檚 final report says coal plants with a total capacity of 5 gigawatts (GW) will be taken offline by 2022, thereof five lignite units in the Rhenish district in western state North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW). After 2022, a total capacity of 37 GW remains to be closed, with a majority being switched off before 2030. Eastern German plants will only be closed after 2030, when a total of 16 GW remains, according to the article. A majority of the commission supports a proposal to complete the phase-out by 2035, when remaining plants could be transferred into a security standby reserve, writes Traufetter.
Martin Kaiser, head of Greenpeace Germany and coal commission member said in a statement that the members themselves had not seen the paper. 鈥淐losing the last coal plant in eastern Germany in 2035 is way too late,鈥 Kaiser said, adding that only an earlier exit date would ensure that the country fulfilled its climate targets.
Find the article in German .
For background, read the articles German government plans to postpone deadline for coal commission and Commission watch 鈥 Managing Germany鈥檚 coal phase-out.
dpa / Spiegel Online
Any date for abandoning coal agreed by Germany鈥檚 coal exit commission must be linked to specific conditions - and these must be fulfilled to actually implement the agreement, the state premier of Germany鈥檚 most populous federal state North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW), Armin Laschet, told news agency dpa in an article on Spiegel Online. 鈥淭here needs to be an if-then-clause,鈥 Laschet said, arguing that 鈥測ou cannot just say this or that will happen on some day in the 2030s.鈥 He stressed that NRW would be ready 鈥渢o support a complete package for a coal exit if the conditions for affected people and companies are acceptable鈥 and sufficient financial means are provided to cope with structural economic changes. Laschet said that 鈥渁 coal exit will be very expensive 鈥 that鈥檚 what happens when you decide to get rid of a domestic, competitive energy source for political reasons and to protect the climate.鈥
Find the article in German .
See the 威力彩玩法 article German government plans to postpone deadline for coal commission and 威力彩玩法鈥檚 Commission watch for more information.
Rheinische Post
Ending coal mining and coal-fired power production in Germany would mean that the country鈥檚 most populopus federal state, North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW), alone would need tens of billions of euros to cope with structural economic changes, the state鈥檚 economy minister Andreas Pinkwart told the newspaper Rheinische Post. 鈥淭he 1.5 billion euros offered by the government so far are at best enough to finance an ad-hoc programme,鈥 Pinkwart said.
Read the article in German .
Find background in the news digest item Germany's lignite mining regions have received nearly 14 billion euros in support since 2013.
Tageszeitung
Giving in to eastern German coal states by delaying a coal commission agreement would bury hopes of 聽a reasonable phase-out compromise, writes Bernhard P枚tter in a commentary for the Tageszeitung (taz). 鈥淭his is why environmental聽 NGOs, participating scientists, and all others who care about climate protection, should leave the commission in this case,鈥 writes P枚tter, adding they should fight for a coal exit on the streets and in the courts. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about the message: First jobs, then growth, then nothing for a long time, and then perhaps a little bit of climate protection as a green trimming.鈥 He goes on to argue that the mining states鈥 demands are exaggerated. 鈥淭hey want 60 billion euros as structural support, but have no idea what to do with the money.鈥
Read the commentary in German . 聽聽
For background, read the articles German government plans to postpone deadline for coal commission and Commission watch 鈥 Managing Germany鈥檚 coal phase-out.
Frankfurter Rundschau
The coal commission delay is 鈥渆mbarrassing for the former climate pioneer鈥 Germany, because the government will not be able to demonstrate it is serious about climate ambitions at the UN climate summit in Poland in early December, writes Joachim Wille in the Frankfurter Rundschau. 鈥淭he incident shows that the government is attempting to relegate the responsibility for the structural transition to a commission. In the end, politicians must decide what should be done and how much money they want to spend on supporting the regions.鈥
For background, read the articles German government plans to postpone deadline for coal commission and Commission watch 鈥 Managing Germany鈥檚 coal phase-out.
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
The coal commission delay shows that the government is taking the work of the commission seriously because 鈥渙therwise this spectacular intervention would have been unnecessary,鈥 writes Andreas Mihm in a commentary in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. But the move reveals multiple failures elsewhere: Not enough communication between commission and government; too little help from the responsible ministers. 鈥淚t鈥檚 astounding that it didn鈥檛 occur to anyone during months of negotiations to discuss the foreseeable financial consequences with the finance minister,鈥 according to Mihm, adding the delay could mainly serve to establish the necessary and neglected financing, especially with a view to upcoming elections in coal states. 鈥淭his is why the decision by the heads of the governing coalition to put the commission in detention can also be interpreted as a lesson in political realism.鈥
For background, read the articles German government plans to postpone deadline for coal commission and Commission watch 鈥 Managing Germany鈥檚 coal phase-out.
dpa
The business-friendly camp of Angela Merkel鈥檚 Conservatives (CDU) has warned the coal phase-out might result in a heavy burden on taxpayers, reports newswire dpa. 鈥淭he proposals must remain within the clearly delineated budget framework,鈥 said Joachim Pfeiffer, economic spokesperson of the CDU parliamentary group. 鈥淭here are tendencies within the commission to agree on compromises at the expense of third parties 鈥 taxpayers and power consumers who are not represented.鈥 The government coalition has so far agreed to support the transition in affected regions with 1.5 billion euros, while Eastern German coal mining states are calling for a 60-billion-euro fund for the coming 30 years.
Read the article in German .
For background, read the articles German government plans to postpone deadline for coal commission and Commission watch 鈥 Managing Germany鈥檚 coal phase-out.
Gas suppliers received an average 3.42 cents per kilowatt hour for the gas they sold to final consumers in 2017, a decrease of three percent on 2016. Germany鈥檚 statistics office said households on average paid 4.96 cents, a decline of 4.4 percent. Industry prices remained largely unchanged at 2.43 cents per kilowatt hour.
The average household power price in Germany is currently almost 30 cents per kilowatt hour. Many energy experts consider this large price difference a major obstacle to using renewable power in other sectors, such as heating and transport.
Read the press release in English .
For background, read the factsheets What German households pay for power and Sector coupling 鈥 Shaping an integrated renewable energy system, as well as the dossier The role of gas in Germany鈥檚 energy transition.